seed.com to order. now news. night, with abby phillip week nights at term eastern on cnn you are in the scene and newsroom. i'm jessica dean in new york, and we are following breaking news out of the middle east today as israel welcomes home, four hostages rest this morning from gaza during a special military operation. all four were kidnapped by hamas from the nova music festival during the october 7 attacks. that was eight months ago. >> they include 22-year-old almog meir, jan, 25-year-old noa are argamani, 2020, 7-year-old, andre cause levin 41-year-old, shlomi ziv andre in shlomi were working as security guards at the music festival and you may remember noa argamani from this horrific video from the october 7 attacks, where we saw her screaming as a mosque fighters drove away with her on a motorbike israel saying this morning's rescue mission took place at two separate locations in central gaza near refugee camp palestinians. >> they're described the raid as hell on earth has heavy shelling and artillery fire bombarded the area. hospital officials say at least 236 people have been killed and more than 400 injured, including women and children cnn cannot independently verify those numbers and gaza's media office does not differentiate between civilians and militants killed in its numbers. we have a team of reporters covering this story from all angles bill been wiedemann has more on the casualties inside gaza, but first, we're going to go to paula hancocks, who is in tel aviv for more details on this surprise rescue mission. paula, how are the hostages tonight well, jessica, as soon as they came back to israeli soil, they were taken straight to a medical center just outside of tel aviv and the doctor said that they were all stable it will all in good medical condition. >> but obviously they were undergoing a number of checks after eight months in captivity in gaza. now, all day we saw friends and family of those four rescued hostages coming to the medical center to meet with the loved ones? for the first time since october 7 when they were all taken from that nova music festival, where hundreds were killed on october 7 now, we heard from the mother of one of the hostages, almog meir jan, and she said that she can't stop hugging him. she thanks. everybody who is involved oh, but she also had a message for the other hostages still in gaza still hundred and 20 hostages in gaza and this will be want a deal. now we want them to come back home. as soon as possible and this is really a message we heard from many of the family members. >> they gave a press conference saying they thank the military for going in and carrying out this mission given their condolences for one and israeli soldier who was killed in the process but du point out that the ceasefire deal is the way to go forward and to make sure that the other hostages are released. now it is the third successful is really a hostage mission we know there was one in october 1 in february. in those cases, there were three hostages that were rescued. jessica. >> alright. paula hancocks, four is live in tel aviv. thank you so much for that reporting. let's turn now to the impact in gaza where palestinians are describing the israeli special operation as hell on earth. and i do want to warn you, the video we're about to show you is graphic. locals telling cnn this about the aftermath of the attack, quote, there are children torn apart and scattered in the streets. we go now to been wiedemann. then what more do we know about the impact inside gaza? >> well this is beyond a doubt, one of the bloodiest is rarely as salt since the beginning of the war back in october. now cnn has been in touch throughout the day with doctors in the central part of gaza where this operation took place. and we've been getting regular updates about the death toll at this point. it's 236. more than 400 wounded now, we're talking of course, we can't verify those numbers because neither israel or egypt will allow journalists into gaza. and as far as the breakdown between civilians and fighters go, i can tell you i went through lots of raw video shot by our freelance cameramen who was in one of those hospitals. and for the most part, there are a lot of children. there are a lot of women, there are some men, but it's not clear whether they're fighters are simply civilians who are caught in the wrong place at the wrong time. but we were able to speak with one doctor at the hospital which is also in central gaza. and he basic his he told us today was the worst day of his entire career as a doctor and the work made far worse by the fact that they're short on medicine, equipment hospitals are working on generators that are barely functioning after basically providing electricity 48 months and this obviously underscores just how dangerous this sort of operation being conducted in a crowded civilian area can be. keep in mind that oftentimes this kind of command to operation takes place at night. this took place at 11:00 in the morning on a saturday when the streets were full of people out trying to buy food, children, and anybody who's been in gaza knows everywhere you go, there are children, so there were children everywhere. which explains why in the video, i went through, i saw so many wounded children now, the reaction to this outside of gaza for hearing, for instance, the palestinian authority president mahmoud are best is calling for an emergency meeting of the un security council and josep borrell, who's the top. european union diplomat said that reports of another civilian massacre are appalling and he called the ban. all parties to join with president biden and his three-point plan to bring about a ceasefire and release of the hostages. as soon as possible. jessica. >> alright. then we'd him and for us live from beirut, lebanon. thanks so much joining us now is former middle east negotiator for the state department, aaron david miller. aaron great to have you on. thanks so much for being here. i just first want to get your reaction, your thoughts on this operation that rescue the four hostages today look for the headline here. >> excuse me, for israeli public, so caught up post-october seven ptsd is clearly an uplifting the redemption of israelis lost on the battlefield taken prisoner he's a core israeli value so i think it's a kind of a collective sigh of relief. obviously, the palestinian told death toll here, even if you don't believe, i'm my statistics, is a frightful one in and it's horrific i'd also point out that in all three cases, the seven hostages rescue and free by the idf they've all been freed aboveground, not from the tongues in this particular case, apparently a family or even to families paid by hamas were guarding with hamas guards regarding these hostages in indu separate locations, which raises the real question my mind most of the hostages are clearly below grounding tunnels. but you have to wonder if families are our guardian hostages, send the information, the information loop on a family holding israelis in gaza that's got a spread very, very quickly and i suspect that may be one of the reasons that the israelis have been so much more success in freeing hostages above, above ground, even though the degree of difficulty this operation he's just quite remarkable because they're going into these civilian apartments and we just we didn't see that video of children severely injured tilde in this in this rescue mission and i wonder from your perspective, is that where we are in terms of if the israelis are going to be able to get back these hostages. is this what's going to happen every time how many nine months? jessica and israelis are managed? i don't want to trivialize this. managed to free easy military force or military ops seven hostage the, big hostage released last november, which 105 are released, came as a consequences of negotiation and i don't think there's much dodd-frank a channel 12 early channel 12 poll out yesterday, basically said 60%, 62% of the israeli public favors the biden plan. so i don't think there's any doubt both from a practical and it political and from the standpoint of preserving life of both israeli lives in palestinian the best course here it is the best pathway here is through a negotiated released. it's just if the headline today was a positive one, jessica, the trend lines to me don't look terribly favorable. >> yeah i'm sorry. >> go ahead. >> finish your thought no, i was just gonna say you've got a situation in which hamas and the government of israel, the work happening, which is approved. >> president biden's plan have reached a point where they appear to have mutually irreconcilable objectives hamas will trade tunnels, time and hostages for what they really want which is the preservation of the senior leadership in their families. enroll for hamas in some post october 7 environment for gaza. and he, israelis are determined it seems to me, i mean, forget destroying hamas as a military organization. yes. and preventing another october 7. but the israelis are constrained. write it seems to me that a mosque will, will survive as an insurgency and given the weakness of the palestinian authority and the complexity of palestinian national politics, hamas is going to have a role. now the israelis have not helped themselves frankly, this government by not doing a lot of post-war planning, which might over time minimize mass's influence. but therein lies the dilemma. if i had a bet where this is going i think if alaska be convinced, i think you're probably talking some point of a phase one release 30 additional hostages may be fewer the women, the elderly, the infirm. >> for an undetermined number of palestinian prisoners, humanitarian assistance posted six week ceasefire. >> i think in this regime, could get that they take and so that's what i wanted to ask. >> when you were a middle east negotiator, these talks have been going and not bringing anything to bear. they've installed secretary of state tony blinken's going back to the middle east to ratchet up pressure on this latest proposal which you were just talking about that it was laid out by president biden that he said is an israeli proposal. you've talked about biden being in this foreign policy cul-de-sac on this issue, du use. it sounds like you think that potentially they could get there on what is phase one? or something like phase one of this proposal number we talked about this before middle east negotiations. these are not normal negotiations, right? or indirect. >> the principal palestinian decision maker, yahya sinwar, is in scott somewhere 20 or 30 meters below ground in a tunnel maybe even in a tunnel in sinai or below rafah or a newness there's no trust to say the least. you have two parties want to destroy hamas and israel and you end up with two speeds slow in slower. i do believe if in fact there isn't opening, it will have to be a phase one opening. i just don't see this israeli government and with hamas, which has no incentive, frankly, for returning all of the hostages until they get what they one and the israelis are simply not prepared to give them what they want that you're probably talking about a phase one deal, and that now they've benny gantz is in the process of deciding whether or not he wants to stay in the war cabinet that the heavy lift on even a phase one deal with this israeli government. the most extreme and right-wing in israel's history is gonna get a hell of a lot harder and i did want to ask you about benny gantz because he had set today as this deadline for when he would leave the government if there was not a day after plan in place and other plans in place for this war in gaza he did not take part in that news conference today because of the successful rescue mission. >> he wanted to give that up beat. but where do you see that going? and what kind of role might his decision play in all of this i mean, i think benny gantz wants to stay in the garden. >> i think he joined the government several days after tuber seven is an act of patriotism, even though he probably cannot stand the prime minister and he's been crossed at least twice by benjamin netanyahu before it doesn't trust him. there's no confidence there, but at the same time, he also provides the prime minister with a sort of legitimacy by remaining inside the government. the real problem here, jessica because knesset arithmetic all you need is 60 seats plus one in 120 seat israeli parliament could ask it to government and benjamin netanyahu has 64 and he asked me what nothing, yeah, always thinking is this if he can give to july 25th, which is the date for the summer recess of the knesset. and the knesset will not come back into session until a week or two before are elections. i think the prime minister is buying time. >> i think he wants to get to the end of this session he's coming to washington on the 24th. >> i don't know who agreed to that date, but it's awfully coincident, coincidental. and he he thinks he can ride this out and then make a judgment on november 5, who how he's going to maneuver depending on who is the president. and frankly, if benjamin netanyahu could vote in this election, let's be clear, he wouldn't be voting for joe biden he'd be voting for the other guy. >> there's no doubt about that so it's a buying time strategy. >> and i'm not sure that the biden administration has a way to cut that short, and that's i think the real problem before i let you go, i do want to ask you one more question about the northern border. >> former israeli ambassador michael oren was here her with us the last hour and he was talking about the escalation between israel and hezbollah as a real point of concern up in the north. >> do you think israel is headed toward a wider war with hezbollah and in repealed been talking about this for a very long time, just the last hamas accuse me, hizballah is rewarded was ms summer of 2006, where 5,000 guys with relatively and sophisticated hydrogen rectory weapons shut down the northern half of israel from hyphen and 11 any sport now you have hezbollah hardened and embattled, trained as a consequence of its involvement in the syrian civil war possessing anywhere from 150,000 hydrogen rectory weapons. >> a very ranges without and with valid he's and precision which cover most of israel. i don't think hizballah wants this for i don't think the israelis one either. they've gone 18 years since the summer of 2006 without a major escalation. and i think it's a concern it's a big concern because that war is going to eclipse in ferocity and probably even in destruction especially in the lebanese and israeli sayyed what you watch play out in gaza. i don't think it's inevitable, but i think the united states is going to have to step up and try to figure out a way to take advantage of the fact perhaps that the biden administration doesn't want this conflict. i don't think the iranians undergoing leadership transition in weka, ebrahim raisi's death, once this so i guess the real question is whether or not a pathway can be found to de-escalate this before you end up with an escrow. an escalatory ladder into full, an all-out-war. >> all right. aaron david miller. thank you so much. we appreciate it. >> thanks for having me so i had this hour on cnn newsroom find out which supreme court justice has raked in more than 2 million in gifts that eye-popping number has some wondering about impartiality and donald trump's former chief of staff pleading not guilty to election subversion charges in arizona, the latest on the case against him and 70 contain other trump associates plus video appears to show burbank police abandoning a homeless man who's clearly in distress. and where they dropped him is raising some serious questions during the scene and newsroom the most anticipated moment of this election and the stakes 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easily won in 2020. >> now, it's important to note those poles are all within the margin of error. cnn senior data reporter harry enten joins us now to run the numbers and harry, what can you tell us about this new fox news polling? >> yeah. you mentioned four keys four key states, three of which joe biden, one last time around two by a very small margin. arizona and nevada virginia, which she won by a wide margin last time around. and that to meet by far is the most concerning paul result here, a tie in virginia in a state that joe biden easily one that every democratic presidential candidate has fairly easily won since barak obama back in 2008 my goodness, gracious, but it's more than that. the dates on this poll, this is post-conviction. if democrats were hoping that the conviction of donald trump trump in the city of new york, in the borough of manhattan, where i am right now is going to mess up this race, move the race more towards joe biden. these pulse should be a wake-up call for them and arizona and nevada, the fact that donald trump is ahead by five percentage points. this is very much in line with the polling that we saw prior to the conviction, which suggests state that joe biden was a lot and a lot of trouble in the sunbelt battleground states nothing i see here changes my mind about that. the only thing that really changes my mind about anything was i didn't think that joe biden would really need to seriously campaign in the state of virginia or the commonwealth of virginia. he may very well have to if this paul result holds in other poll results. >> so let's talk about that. >> that virginia poll for a second because he beat trump there by ten points in 2020, as i think you mentioned, we know that black voters are a key part of joe biden's coalition that took him to the white house in 2020. what is this poll telling us about black voters in virginia? >> hey, it's telling us what we've known from the national polling that is joe biden is struggling with black voters doing significantly worse than he did four years ago in the pre-election polls. i mean, you see it up on your screen right now. joe biden was leading among black voters in the state or the commonwealth of virginia by 76 points at the end of the 2020 campaign, he's only a head by 49 points in this particular pole you may look at that and you may say, oh wow, joe biden still has a considerable advantage. but the fact is democratic candidates for president usually when among black voters by 758085 or 90 plus points in the case of barak obama, here we see joe biden with only a 49 point advantage among african american voters. if you go back through the record book jessica, and you look at democratic performances among black voters. this is the worst if it helped through the election since i believe jfk back in 1960 before of course, the civil rights act of 1,964, this would be a truly historic performance on the bad end for joe biden and on the very good end for donald trump so let's let's talk about some stunning new reporting on the supreme court justices and the gifts that they receive this is from the group fix the court they reported this, but what are the numbers saying? they're telling me that maybe i should have been a supreme court justice. that's what they're telling me because i would have loved to have gotten these gifts. i mean, look at this amount of gifts except by supreme court justice clarence thomas, 103 gifts over the last 20 years, amount greater than 2 million. now, you'll see there are other justices on that list too. of course, have received gift amounts. samuel alito, north of 100,000, 170,000. but the fact is the amount that clarence thomas just the number of gifts, but the amount of money that he has received. i think these numbers will do nothing to quell the idea that supreme court justices have to be much more transparent with the gifts that they've received. perhaps have to step back from issuing or taking part in certain opinions. and more than that will do nothing to quell the thoughts from a lot of liberals who think that clarity currents thomas should not be on the united states supreme court. now, of course, he's probably not going to listen to them, right? he hasn't listened to them all along. but these types of numbers are something that just puts the political pressure on the united states supreme court. and that low approval rating that we've seen, that historic low approval rating from the american public. i think this super charges that and it's just something that i think a lot of folks wouldn't necessarily have expected, but a lot of watchdogs on the court's certainly did. and these numbers definitely bear that out. >> yeah. i was going to say it's not going to do anything to help those very local numbers for the supreme court that we've seen on a lighter note before we let you go this week, we saw the end of an era on wheel of fortune longtime host pat sajak was hiring. where does he rank on your mount? rushmore of greatest aim show host. you know, i this is a great question and we can all have different mount rushmore is here, you know, i think i have bob barker at the top of my list, right? i mean, how could you not have bob barker of course this is a long time i'm he wasn't just the host. he was the star of the prices, right? that that was what he was. you came out, you loved them. he was america's grandfather. he got pat sajak will a fortune or of course, alex tribeca on jeopardy one, gentlemen, not on your slide, who i would put forth would perhaps we re just film and why absolutely adored on who wants to be a millionaire. but you really can't do anything wrong. i love game shows. i'm sad to see pat sajak do, but fortunately, we have vanna white to continue holding holding the candle for all of us who loved the game show us of our youth. ryan seacrest perhaps will be a good host, but vanna white there will at least ensure some continually because the fact is there's so much changing underworld. and what pat sajak going, it's just another thing from my childhood that goes adios amigos into the winds of our memories i know you talked about bob barker. >> i spent a lot of land like sick days from school watching the price is right. >> those are the best days, right? chicken soup and bob barkat no better quell for the call that's right. >> harry and didn't think so much good to say up next is the world marks 80 years since d-day historians ask does it all feel a little bit familiar? some world leaders, there being a lot more direct about it it is the same now as it was when evil was unleashing its aggression against its neighbors in the 19 hitler cross line after line putin is doing the same the increase in wildfires is exponential unpredictable uncontrolled with overwhelming consequences. >> the need to do something is urgent slightly when we have schreiber tomorrow at nine on cnn this making you uncomfortable good when you've got type two 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assignment with audie cornish. listen wherever you get your podcasts close captioning brought to you by guilt, visit guilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands, it has the designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry. >> there'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% or so of guilt.com today president joe biden wrapping up his visit to france tonight with a state dinner with french president emmanuel macron. this event was the grand finale to biden's five-day trip to france as he looked to strengthen the relationship with this critical us ally, seeming correspondent priscilla alvarez is joining us now with more from washington, dc and hello, earlier today, biden categorize this trip to france as his most remarkable why is this visit standing out for him well, this trip also came at a critical time. >> president biden has spoken multiple times about how important it is to preserve freedom and democracy. and that was front and center during this trip marked getting the 80th anniversary of d-day, and in his remarks on friday stressing these exact points and he was doing it alongside one of the u.s. oldest allies in france. now, today was focused on underscoring the ties with this country and over the course of the day, the two liters participated in multiple ceremonial events, including starting the day, paying their respects at the tomb of the unknown soldier and the president describing it as a quote, moving experience. now, again, france is one of the u.s. is all this allies and the two talked about ukraine, first and foremost, this of course, came up multiple times over the course of this trip because of the invasion of ukraine and france being one of the leaders in europe in standing by ukraine. and so this was a moment to reaffirm the us leadership, but also the support worldwide for ukraine in this moment and pledging additional support to them and the president, speaking of that directly during those remarks that you see there, take a listen this week we have showed the world once again the power of allies what we can achieve when we stand together matches this relationship between france, united states exemplifies because we know what happens if putin succeeds in subjugating ukraine and it won't. >> we won't start you know, you know, put my kind of stop at ukraine. it's not just ukraine's about much more than in ukraine. all of europe will be threatened. we're not going to let that happen so this was a theme really over the course of the trip was tying the present to the past and making clear the stakes of this moment. >> now of course, the two leaders also works. cited to talk about the situation in the middle east. and they did today hey, welcome the news of the rescue of those four hostages. and france of course, has also expressed their support for the hostage deal that president biden laid out recently, that three-phase proposal door, the exchange of all the hostages for a ceasefire agreement. so all of these issues were expected to come up over the course of these last few days. but again, with democracy and freedom being four front and center simply because of the anniversary that they were commemorating this week. now, tomorrow, the president and the first lady will also participate in a wreath-laying ceremony in an american cemetery and then return to the united states. but certainly the president's spending these last few days talking about the cherished ties with france and really trying to strengthen this alliance with, again, one of the the us is oldest allies, priscilla alvarez. thanks so much for that reporting i want to talk more about the president's trip with douglas brinkley, a presidential historian and professor of history at rice university. he's also a prolific author, including the book, the boys of pointe du hoc. >> ronald reagan, d-day and the us army second ranger battalion, douglas. >> thanks so much for being here today. i really appreciate it and you're just the perfect person to talk to to kind of tie all of this together the moment that we're seeing i'm presently and then looking back to the history that we're marking as well, biden calling this trip to france his most remarkable yet what is stood out to you about these past five days and the president's trip to france well it's been joe biden smoked successful foreign policy trip. i say that because you're always very special in any precedent goes to normandy. i mean, you go to the cemetery there. you see the white crosses, the stars of david of fallen heroes of the battle of normandy he, you had the english channel asher backdrop and you're able, when you're standing with the head of the leader of president of france to realize, wow, we're in a repeat situation that we now have putin acting as a totalitarian thug who's gone and brutalized? ukraine. and could they, could russia expand further? so it was a huge foreign policy moment for biden, i think he did well, i mean, ftr always be remembered for the original on june 6, 1944, prayer to the nation when the normandy landings were occurring ronald reagan 1984 gave that extraordinary peggy noonan written speech. reagan delivered it beautifully about the valor of the us army second rangers. these 225 special ops who climb those 100 foot cliffs there while germans were shooting at them. and i'm now joe biden coming reminder thank us. ukraine matters that nato matters that we've got to make sure we don't leave zelenskyy in the lurch. >> all right. i mean, i'm thinking about d-day and as you're describing it, it's it is it was such a collection of allies defending western democracy and europe. and this trip clearly about trying to strengthen those ties as well douglas, fir, so many americans that maybe don't quite see it or don't have all the dots connected, connect the dots. why so many people like yourself are saying, look back to the 1930s and look to now and look at a lot of these parallels. >> well, let's say 1938, you had hitler on the loose he was invading. >> you have the whole problem with the czechoslovakia issue. >> you had the problem of amazing of poland and it just kept going and there was an isolation is sediment at home led by people i can read forward and charles lindbergh and others to get out of it. it's a european war. we don't want to repeat and so fdr at a hard time educating the country about the need to stop the third reich to stop their expansion in europe, alas, we were bombed on december 7, 19 41, and japan declared war on us and then germany declared war on us. and roosevelt had put a lot of mechanisms in place, so we can have our hurry up industrial mobilization, economy, where we were able to convert, say, a factory that was making women's blouses to suddenly making parachutes or a saxophone accompany being converted to make shipped vowels. it was the greatest, most extraordinary innovation and industrial might the world had ever seen in the united states in the end, pulled it off than what we accomplished in one at utah, omaha gold sore juno beaches. it was long slog after winning that battle of normandy to the battle of the bulge in the march to berlin. but the, at the end totalitarianism was stamped out in western europe. but now we're seeing a totalitarian rise of putin's russia. and the moment is here. do kind of fork did that it's just about convincing missing enough more republicans in congress to fund the ukraine issue, about half the republicans want to help ukraine and about half don't. and i think this trip help biden's cause. >> all right. douglas brinkley. great to see you. thanks so much. >> we'll be right back hey, mom, how many should i decorated have ran have blue that's a really tough call. who are you if you look at the latest data? you're probably going to need a lot of those purple sprinkles how this guy really knows his stuff. >> okay. ready to washington one second. >> i got it. finished my laundry. >> it's 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its qing law has more arizona prosecutors arrive for the arraignments of some of former president donald trump's closest advisers. sir, could you state your name, please mark randall matters. trump's former white house chief of staff, we do an enter a plea of not guilty, also entering a not guilty plea. trump campaign operative, mike roman, could you state your name, please? >> michael roman and meadows both face charges in multiple states and the fake elector scheme aimed at overturning the 2020 election results in arizona and in georgia. >> roman, also this week was indicted in wisconsin the state cases, all date back to an alleged plan hatched in the days and weeks after trump lost his last reelection bid, where the underside being the duly elected and qualified electors in arizona calling themselves electors. these 11 people assembled on december 14, 2020 to declare the state's winner. >> donald j. trump, of his state of florida. number a bonus 11 but joe biden had won arizona arizona prosecutors say meadows, roman, and other trump allies charged in april, like former trump attorney john eastman. i of course, pled night guilty. >> and current rnc election integrity council. christina bobb will be what the case coordinated fake electors in arizona and other swing-state attempting to keep trump in power perhaps the most well-known of the 18 indicted by arizona is former trump lawyer rudy giuliani who say arizona prosecutors dodge them for weeks as they tried to serve him court papers there. so incompetent, they can find me. they also can't count votes correctly live streaming has taunts right thing until arizona agents caught up with giuliani, that his 80th birthday in florida now has two weeks to appear in person in court and post a $10,000 bond giuliani so far hasn't indicated exactly when he's going to be heading to arizona. >> we did check with the miracle, but county sheriff's department. and so far, he has not yet been processed for his mug shot or his 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his office yeah. >> and so now what he's saying is that he wants a state investigation. jessica and burbank police also saying that they're looking into the actions of the officer and looking also into the videos, both the bodycam, the camera inside of the patrol car, and also the witnesses that were around this video that was released, essentially shows that patrol car pull up to the street here behind me and you see the officers getting out of the vehicle trying to help this man who appear to be in handcuffs, they get those off. and when he comes out to the tree, t essentially starts waving his arms and it appears that he loses his balance and falls on all fours and then you see those officers get back into the patrol car and leave you then in the videos, see this man laying down belly down and it was just something that the city council members said didn't know how long it lasted. he said this was a disgrace, said essentially that this man was dumped on the side of the road and said that he was outraged by all of this. now burbank police releasing a statement, essentially changing things a bit and explaining things a bit further, saying that initially they got this call about a naked man and the officers went to see him, got him to get dressed, talk to him, and told him and that they would take him anywhere that he wanted to go. >> and so here's part of the statement from burbank police. they say he voluntarily got into the patrol vehicle and was driven towards the metro red line station along the way, the individual as to be led out of the patrol vehicle to get coffee, the officers complied immediately with his requests, pulled over and let the individual out of that patrol car, but overall, the big picture here is homelessness and how a difficult it is for politicians here in los angeles and really in california to deal with this. it's something that they really haven't figured out just above camila bernal for us reporting live from los angeles thing so much. >> 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